Deney’s Clock has been a local meeting place and landmark for many years.

The clock is located in the town centre, above a cantilevered verandah. The verandah and associated shop have been modified over the years but the clock remains. It is a large, square-faced clock in a metal case and set on a squat post. The “Lions” insignia sits above the clock.

This clock, a local landmark, dates from the 1940s, when Kenneth Charles Deneys, haberdasher, took over the business of Charles W. Tyzack, draper, in Lots 1 and 2 of Block 24 in the Werribee township.

From about 1920 Tyzack occupied a shop on the corner of Watton and Station Streets, (owned by M. A. Beamish) and owned a dwelling in Watton Street. The shop was valued at £53. By 1925-26 the valuation of the corner shop had risen to £90. By the mid-1930s, Tyzack was the owner of the shop valued at £70.

The clock installed on the two-storey corner building by Deneys in the 1940s has been a local landmark since then and has been used constantly by Werribee residents.